
Whatever the case, Lockjaw begins gathering the McGuffin Gems along with the brave beasties - the Falcon's bird, Redwing; Aunt May's dog, Ms Lion; Kitty Pryde's dragon pal, Lockheed; Speedball's cat, Niels, renamed Hairball; and my favourite, Throg, Frog of Thunder.
This first of four issues is a fun romp and thoroughly light-hearted. Well, almost. God knows why, but Chris Eliopoulos (writer of Franklin Richards: Dark Reindeer, a Christmas special I, er, just made up) brings up the dead pregnant wife when telling the origin of Throg. Honestly, what do the kids need to know other than that a frog had a sliver of Thor's hammer and was worthy enough to tap into its magic?
Oh, and Lockheed is a bit of a downer, whining on about those he's lost - you don't even get that much angst for the lost Kitty Pryde in the X-Men titles.
Overall, though, this is a hoot, with Ms Lion being the other standout character - hey, why isn't that pooch on my Karl Kerschl cover? - managing to shut the chatty animals up with a stunning revelation. Which I'm not going to spoil, but here's an example of the book's general tone:

This mini runs to four issues and I expect I'll love every one. Now, when are DC going to give us Krypto and the Legion of Super Pets?
'tis a pity it is a Marvel book.
ReplyDelete